January 5: There is No Mess Too Big {for God} to Clean Up


Uh oh, momma... He kinda winces and looks my way. I thought the cap was still on and I squeezed it and... 

Applesauce splattered all over the floor.

I can see a glimmer of my past reactions in his eyes as he sizes me up, wondering what I'll do.

Oh, it's okay, buddy, I respond from the kitchen sink where I'm doing dishes. I'll clean it up in a minute when I'm done. No worries. There's no mess too big to clean up.

I paused at the thought, looking up from the sink and out the window. I caught a glimpse of the Lord's heart in those words, streaming in like the warm rays of sunshine through the kitchen window. Splashing light all over the table and brightening the room. Promising to warm every heart to His will if we let Him.

You know, kids, I continued, there's no mess too big to clean up, even for God. He's bigger than any mess we could ever make.

What if there was poop all over the house? the boy asks, as boys do. Always something with the bodily functions.

Well, that would sure be a big, gross mess, but we could still clean it up. 

There's no mess of a life, no mess of a promise, no mess of a relationship, no mess of an addiction, no mess of loss or destruction so big that the Lord isn't bigger still, that the Lord isn't able to clean up by His forgiveness and grace.

There may not be any more applesauce to go around, because actions have consequences, but He can sure clean it up off the floor and give you a fresh start.

A start from the place of redemption, healing, forgiveness, and wholeness.

So, kids, we're in this messy life together, you and me and God. We're all on the same team here. Because Lord knows our sin is going to spill all over each other--words we wish we could take back, promises broken, trust squandered--and we'll just have to work together to clean it up. We'll work together to make it right, for as long as it takes.

Because kids, there's also beauty and purpose in the mess. There's beauty in the brokenness. It's really a gift, you see, because it's only when we're completely broken, out of options, and up against a wall that we realize how very little control we actually have over this life. That the control we thought we had was merely an illusion, propped up by circumstance and possessions and health.

When we can look at the mess for what it is and, as a result, see God more clearly--clearly see that we are not Him--that, kids, is one of the greatest gifts.

He promises that if we humble ourselves before Him, that He will lift us up.

Oh, how we need that, kids. To be humbled, that is. He humbles us out of His great love for us, so that it may go well with us all of our days. To teach us that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord {Deuteronomy 8:3}.

The mess reminds us of our humanness, our fallibility. It points us toward the only One capable of making all things new, throwing us fresh into the arms of His warm and redeeming grace. If it weren't for some spilled applesauce every once in a while, we might get to thinking we could navigate this whole messy life on our own.

Don't you forget that, kids.



...if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land. {2 Chronicles 7:14}

January 4: There's No Magic Date on the Calendar, but There's Still Hope for the New Year

I made pulled chicken for dinner tonight, which was really good, by the way. A child, amidst puking sounds and other complaints, stated he was not going to eat said chicken on his plate. I said, oh yes he was, for there were children at his school who didn't get to go home to a warm meal at night. The only time they eat is at school, so we need to be grateful for what we have instead of complaining. And he says, well, then you can give them this chicken. #smartdonkey

We were driving home in the afternoon on New Year's Eve. The day had already been busy and showed no promise of letting up anytime soon. All good things, but draining things when your belly is the size of a watermelon and you just want to sit down on the couch, for the love.

The kids were in the back yelling and laughing at one another. I'd warmed up my coffee for the ride home and turned on the radio, slightly louder then the chaos in the back, in an attempt to drown it out. Choose your noise. That's something I've learned is helpful for my sanity in this stage of life where pockets of sanity are sparse.

After months of orange barrels rendering my usual exit ramp impassable, it finally opened again and I made my way around the curve. The once barren land that had been torn up by the ongoing construction now had grass seedlings sprouting up in a blanket of bright, vibrant green.

The ground was covered with thriving new life. On December 31st. In Cleveland.

Any other year, I'd have thought it was crazy to suggest it's possible to plant and grow grass at the end of December. Isn't that strictly a summer thing? As someone with a black thumb, I don't really know, but green grass on New Years Eve?

That's impossible.

About twelve hours later, the internet was alive with new growth of it's own: posts with resolutions for 2016.

New Year, New You.

2016 is going to be amazing.

Reaching your fitness goals, your health goals, your weight loss goals.

I did have this insane urge to clean up the house and get organized after we put the Christmas decorations away, which immediately translated into the desire to go out and buy baskets and cute storage bins with which to organize all my crap. Because, somehow a new basket would make it finally happen, right? My loving husband pointed out that wasn't the solution to my problem, exciting as it may sound.

Other then the organizing bug, which we could just chalk up to nesting at this point, all the resolution chatter kind of rubbed me the wrong way this year. I know that we need to have goals and life direction or we will just crash and burn on autopilot. I get the momentum behind a fresh start, but there's no magic date on a calendar that will transform your life. It may for a time, just like running out and buying colorful, new baskets may give you the illusion of getting organized, but after the moment has passed and the resolutions fade (which research shows is about mid-February, if you make it that long...), you'll be stuck looking in the mirror at the same old you.

And feeling incredibly guilty for it.

As if this "old you" is a failure.

And I think we just go about the whole thing all wrong. Because while the world, and the whole lot of us sometimes, look at the outward appearances, the Lord looks at the heart. And it's only the heart, in true alignment with Him by His grace, that produces any sort of lasting life change. All the outward change we crave needs to be an overflow of inward change, or it doesn't stand a chance. Motivation runs out, momentum can only sustain so far, our feet fail, desires wane...

Why would you ever complain, O Jacob,
or, whine, Israel, saying,
“God has lost track of me.
He doesn’t care what happens to me”?
Don’t you know anything? Haven’t you been listening?
God doesn’t come and go. God lasts.
He’s Creator of all you can see or imagine.
He doesn’t get tired out, doesn’t pause to catch his breath.
And he knows everything, inside and out.
He energizes those who get tired,
gives fresh strength to dropouts.
For even young people tire and drop out,
young folk in their prime stumble and fall.
But those who wait upon God get fresh strength.
They spread their wings and soar like eagles,
They run and don’t get tired,
they walk and don’t lag behind. {Isaiah 40:27-31}

So, yeah, all those seemingly impossible resolutions looming overhead this coming year? The momentum won't get you there, the excitement won't last. But still, even green grass grows on barren land as we flip the page to this calendar year. Nothing is impossible with God.

Maybe all these outward goals need to start with a heart change. Maybe we need to see ourselves as He sees us first.

I think for me this year, resolutions, if you want to call them that, will look a little different. I'm not going to buy into the lie that a "new me" is a "better me", or that the "old me" is a failure, because I'm loved as much in this moment as I will ever be, period. I don't need to do anything or be anything or change anything to earn anything I don't already have. He's enough, therefore I'm enough.

But I do want to see Him more clearly, to love more deeply, and to give more sacrificially this year. I don't need a devotional checklist or a read-through-the-bible-in-a-year plan in order to achieve that: I simply need to spend time with Him and press into His grace. My life, and my world, will be changed accordingly.

Maybe you need something more structured, and that's fine. As for me, I used to make lists, and then I realized they made me feel bad because I'd look at them and see all the things I haven't accomplished and areas where I failed, so I gave them up for Lent a long time ago and haven't looked back.

A relationship isn't about checklists, do's and don'ts, or even reading plans. For some reason in Christianity, we try to "manage" our relationship with the Lord, turning it into a set of measurable goals. We track our "progress" each day, like it's some sort of class we're taking, gaining credit for our performance. It's stifling. Can you imagine if that's what marriage was like? Ugh. No sir.

Building a real relationship is about getting to know someone's heart. It's a delicate and mysterious process, and if you do it right, it should take a lifetime. So my resolution for the year is to seek Him by His grace, and He promises to fulfill the desires of my heart as I allow it to be molded and shaped by Him.

December 8: As I Have Loved You, So You Must Love One: An Other


She had a stack of paper plates now from visits to the food table. Probably five trips in all now.

I watched as she emptied a plate of perfectly good candy into the pile of spinach dip, placing the clean, candy-free plate underneath. Maybe she meant to do that?

She proceeded to pluck each piece of candy out of the dip, wiping them off one at a time. The napkin soiled quickly, so her attempts to clean them seemed futile, but she kept wiping the candy anyways. Kept wiping her greasy fingers anyways. Although neither were really clean, she saved the candy in a pile and picked up the dice to roll again. She didn't understand the game we were playing, and she was growing frustrated.

We're on 5's now, I say. Good job! You got one! Now roll the other two. Roll again. Oh, bummer... 

Maybe next time.

And she mumbled to herself. Angry mutterings of a hatred down deep. The heart can't help but bubble to the surface sometimes.

The napkin was full of dip now, but she kept wiping her fingers. She sopped up the remaining dip on her plate and plopped the filthy napkin down on the clean table beside her. Within the next couple rolls she had won, and it was time for her to move on. Piling the candy back on her stack of plates, she picked up her stuff and relocated, leaving her mess behind for the next guest.

She comes to the church events, I'm sure, for the food. I can't say I blame her, because {and let's just be honest here} I've had the same motivation myself at times. But she comes. 

When's the baby due? She asked me. Oh, you already know it's a boy? Oh wow!

I smiled through the awkwardness, laughing even, as we talked a bit.

And as I sat there that night, passing the dice around the table and observing her, I realized that, although I'm quick to exchange pleasantries when I see her, I'm not so quick to engage. To seek her out. To sit down and talk with her. Face to face, human to human. Like she matters.

For many people, "other" is almost always bad and problematical, if not life-threatening. It conveys not just odd but less, not just different but inferior, not just unfamiliar but undesired, not just questionable but unwanted. Then, as we imagine all that cross-cultural distinction, combine it with extreme poverty, no sanitation, no education, no water. What you have is possibly so far beyond the bell curve of what registers as important, valuable or attractive that there is very little for those in the middle of the bell curve to see or care about. {Mark Labberton, The Dangerous Act of Loving Your Neighbor: Seeing Others Through the Eyes of Jesus}

And that's the thing. While it's pretty easy to identify the "other" in our everyday lives, it's an entirely different thing to really see them. To place value on them as a person. Then to convey that value and importance by choosing to engage, however uncomfortable and strange it may be. And yet, God calls us to go one step further: to love.

I desperately want this for my kids. I want them to have eyes not only to identify the other, but to really see them. And not only to see them, but to love them in a tangible way. To seek them out when the rest of the world walks on by. But that has to start with me, for there is no teacher more powerful than example.

What if, in our own lives, we began to look at this very common list of Love One Another scriptures from a slightly different perspective {emphasis and grammatical changes mine}:

A new command I give you: Love one: an other. As I have loved you, so you must love one: an other. {John 13:34} 
By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one: an other. {John 13:35 
Be devoted to one: an other, in love. Honor one: an other, above yourselves. {Romans 12:10} 
Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one: an other, for whoever loves others has fulfilled the law. {Romans 13:8}

Sometimes, punctuation changes everything. It's about where in the sentence you place your emphasis. Where you focus. Where you pause, and where you rush on by. 

Everyday, but especially during this holiday season, I'd encourage you to pause for ONE, my friends. To emphasize just ONE. To slow down and see ONE.

An other.

Finally, brothers and sisters, rejoice! Strive for full restoration, encourage one: an other, be of one mind, live in peace. And the God of love and peace will be with you. {2 Cor. 13:11} 
You, my brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, serve one: an other, humbly in love. {Galatians 5:13} 
Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one: an other, in love. {Ephesians 4:2}

So the mess of spinach dip on the table was cleaned up. Gifts were exchanged, along with pleasantries. Awkward smiles all around, but the other ladies, like myself, pushed through the conversation to a small glimpse of tangible love on the other side.

When you go to the store, whether it be a mundane trip for groceries or some Christmas shopping, love one: an other. 

Slow down and notice.

When you walk down the street, exercise at the gym, or saunter into your local coffee shop, love one: an other. 

Pause just long enough to engage.

When you sit in church on a normal Sunday during this Advent season, love one: an other.

Even small gestures of love go a long way. 

Sometimes the "other" is the smelly man on the side of the road with a sign. Sometimes it's a single mom beating her child. It's the belligerent customer at the store or the rude manager. Sometimes it's even the person in the church pew next to you who, although they look just like you, directly opposes most everything you believe. It's the person who talked behind about you behind your back or the woman who is more vocal then you deem appropriate. It's the person who refuses to admit they're wrong. The person who's being anything but loving towards you.

It's the adulterer, the murderer, the abuser. The violated, the manipulative, the neglected. 

It's me and you. And Jesus came for us all.

Be the one who not only notices but seeks them out. Convey their inherent value and importance by choosing to engage. Chances are, if you've identified them as "other," the rest of the world has, too, and you may be the only slice of Jesus they've received in a long time. 

Love one: an other. 

May we see others though the eyes of Jesus today.

Here is a simple rule of thumb for behavior: Ask yourself what you want people to do for you; then grab the initiative and do it for them! If you only love the lovable, do you expect a pat on the back? Run-of-the-mill sinners do that. If you only help those who help you, do you expect a medal? Garden-variety sinners do that. If you only give for what you hope to get out of it, do you think that’s charity? The stingiest of pawnbrokers does that. {Luke 6:31-33}





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December 3: Christmas Lights


Toby colored me a lovely picture tonight. It's a string of...Christmas lights. 

He was so proud, his face all lit up, when he showed me the special picture he'd drawn all by himself. Just like big brother did the other day. 

Christmas lights. 

He insisted we hang it on the refrigerator, so hang it, we did. This precious, one-of-a-kind work of art that is so unmistakably a picture of...Christmas lights. 

So many tiny Christmas lights.


#laughingalltheway


December 1: When the Holidays Whisper, "I Can't BE Until I DO..."

Eva's first trip to the dentist. She hasn't let go of her little Minnie Mouse toothbrush and toothpaste since then.

So I finally threw up about a week and a half's worth of photo collages on the blog last night. 

Pictures waiting in the queue. Thoughts drifting but never articulated. All buried under the business and pressure of the season. 

I think to myself, I can't post the birthday photos until I get the handful off the camera to post with them. The homeless people came and joined us, after all, and I wanted to write a little something about that.

But I can't sit down and write until I get the laundry done, the dishes done, the thank you notes written, the overdue appointments scheduled, the pile school papers filled out, the health insurance information collected, etc.--you know, all those "more important things."

Those things that are expected. Those things that people are waiting on. Those things that affect our future. 

Those things, that at the moment, all seem to be more important than me. Than my soul. Sometimes it's hard to take our focus off the seen to value the unseen.

But those lingering mental messages are like a slow, suffocating death to me.

"I can't BE until I DO..." 

The lie I heard whispering in my ear finally became a full-on shout the other day. 

As if the doing somehow in and of itself is better. Makes me better, makes the whole shebang work a little better. Like a well-oiled machine. Nevermind that machines don't have a soul.

Normally, the laundry is not the boss of me. You can stop by almost anytime at our small little house on the corner of the street, and you will most certainly find laundry living on the loveseat in our family room. It takes up residence there in some form of doneness--unfolded, folded, trampled and refolded--until laundry day rolls around again and it must be moved, because the hampers are now needed for dirty clothes.

But the holidays come with a checklist of their own, which, by itself may not be so bad, but adding it to the normal craziness of life makes for one overwhelming month. And I've tried to manage it, really I have. 

We have the tree up, fluffed, and decorated, the stockings hung by the chimney with care. Teacher gifts have been acquired, some presents ordered and on the way. The annoying yet beloved Elf has returned, but I think he's going to come down with the cold we've been passing around shortly and just sit for a few days in all his sniveling, Kleenex-toting glory. It may, in fact, be less disappointing that way, as he's about as reliable as the tooth fairy when it comes to living up to all the hype. I should fire them both. 

But still. 

Be still.

That I haven't done so much. And in all the doing and the keeping up and the making happen, I think I may have allowed a piece of myself to shrivel a bit.

A being, by very nature, must spend some time just being

I've realized that in a hectic month of to-do's, it's even more important to just be. Sometimes. For a little while. Before one moves right on to the next thing. Because there is always a next thing. There will always be more to do. 

But we aren't doings. We are beings.

So the machine may not run as smoothly, but my soul will be as velvet once again. Because it's vital, in all the hustle, to spend some time on the things that replenish your soul. The things that breathe life into you, make you tear up, and cause you to wake up. Things that help you remember what it's like to truly be alive.

On the heels of the Christmas season, make sure you spend some time just being, my friends. It so happens that the being enriches the doing, but it's a disaster when attempted the other way around. 

The world will holiday on without you.

Be still.

xo

“Glory to God in the highest heaven,
and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.” Luke 2:14